| Literature DB >> 23112669 |
Andres Diaz Lantada1, Carlos González Bris, Pilar Lafont Morgado, Jesús Sanz Maudes.
Abstract
Intraoral devices for bite-force sensing have several applications in odontology and maxillofacial surgery, as bite-force measurements provide additional information to help understand the characteristics of bruxism disorders and can also be of help for the evaluation of post-surgical evolution and for comparison of alternative treatments. A new system for measuring human bite forces is proposed in this work. This system has future applications for the monitoring of bruxism events and as a complement for its conventional diagnosis. Bruxism is a pathology consisting of grinding or tight clenching of the upper and lower teeth, which leads to several problems such as lesions to the teeth, headaches, orofacial pain and important disorders of the temporomandibular joint. The prototype uses a magnetic field communication scheme similar to low-frequency radio frequency identification (RFID) technology (NFC). The reader generates a low-frequency magnetic field that is used as the information carrier and powers the sensor. The system is notable because it uses an intra-mouth passive sensor and an external interrogator, which remotely records and processes information regarding a patient's dental activity. This permits a quantitative assessment of bite-force, without requiring intra-mouth batteries, and can provide supplementary information to polysomnographic recordings, current most adequate early diagnostic method, so as to initiate corrective actions before irreversible dental wear appears. In addition to describing the system's operational principles and the manufacture of personalized prototypes, this report will also demonstrate the feasibility of the system and results from the first in vitro and in vivo trials.Entities:
Keywords: biomedical monitoring; biomedical telemetry; magnetic field communication; wireless communication
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23112669 PMCID: PMC3478796 DOI: 10.3390/s120911544
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1.(a) Intraoral splint with passive force sensor. (b) External wireless interrogator. (c) Subsequent data delivery to PC for additional studies.
Figure 2.Energizing subsystem of the sensing unit.
Figure 3.Force-sensitive oscillator subsystem of the sensing unit.
Figure 4.Splint, passive sensors with transducers and photopolymerizable resin for encapsulation (upper image). View of the external interrogator prototype (lower image).
Figure 5.Sensor calibration curve before encapsulation and once encapsulated within the splint.
Figure 6.Components for manufacturing the intraoral splint.
Figure 7.Splint prototype manufacturing process: Instrumentation of the intra-oral splint.
Figure 8.In vivo validation trials.
Figure 9.Results summary. Frequency vs. applied force (related to maximum bite force).